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Well, good evening. It's good
to see you tonight. We've made it to the last evening,
and seems like we just got started, and here it is already over,
just about. But let Paul and I convey to
you our thanks for your kindness and grace to us. We have just
had a wonderful time, and like I said a day or two ago, wow,
it's like coming back home here. We've had a longstanding relationship
with your church, with your pastor and the staff, and we love you
dearly. This is a wonderful group to
speak to. I've told some of you that preaching
is a two-way street. Not only takes good preaching,
it takes good listening. And good listening eggs on good
preaching. So I'm depending on you tonight
to be a good listener, okay? We come to this last text, and
it is somewhat apropos that here we are. in the few days before
Easter Sunday that we are taking a look at this section dealing
with the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ and the events that take
place surrounding his death. And we have noted in our study
of these glimpses of grace from the Gospel of Luke that how surprising
grace is. It's always throwing up the unexpected. We saw it, didn't we, in the
parables, that elder brother excluded, the one who had served
his dad and winds up being excluded from the feast while the prodigal
is admitted. That rich young ruler who seemed
to be a shoe-in is turned away, goes away very sorrowfully. He
won't part with his possessions. And Zacchaeus, of all people,
that rascal, is called down from a tree and Christ saves him. It's just so unexpected. And here we go again. Who could
have seen this one coming? Let's take a good look at it.
Each of the Gospels tell us that Jesus was not crucified by himself. He was not alone out there. He
was crucified between two thieves, two robbers, two rebels. Some would translate this word. Remember that Pilate had offered
to release one of two men, Barabbas or Jesus. And it's interesting
that usually the Romans crucified men in groups. If they had been
a group of robbers or criminals or rebels and so forth, they
would be crucified together. And it would seem that these
two men might very well likely be part of Barabbas' group. Barabbas, remember, was guilty
of insurrection and committing murder in that insurrection.
And there's an interesting wordplay. Have you ever thought about the
name Barabbas? Y'all know what Abba means, right? Abba, father, it's the intimate
way in Aramaic of saying father. Bar is son of. So Barabbas' name
literally means the son of the father. Well, guess what? We've
got another son of the father over here, Jesus. And it's like
Pilate holds up two son of the fathers. Which one do you want? Do you want this one that takes
life or this one that gives life? One that puts men in the grave
or calls men out of the grave? Which one do you want? And the
sinfulness of men responds, we want Barabbas. What shall I do
with Jesus? Crucified. So it's an ironic situation that
Jesus literally dies in the place of Barabbas. You see how these
little coincidences, if you will, are sprinkled and scattered all
through this. Oh, the irony of the thing. He's
delivered to be crucified. We've become very accustomed
to that language. We see depictions and so forth,
but nothing I don't think in our day and time could compare
us with the horror of what crucifixion really entailed. We don't really
know where it came from. We know the Persians seem to
have had it at some point, passed it on to the Greeks. When Alexander
the Great conquered the island city of Tyre they held out for
a long time and he was very aggravated with them when it was all over.
He crucified 2,000 men there on the shores of the Mediterranean
Sea. You know a little bit about the Spartacus Revolt, the slave
revolt, roughly 70 B.C. when that took place. When that
revolt was finally put down, the Romans crucified 6,000 of
those escaped slaves who had joined Spartacus' army. The Appian
Way, the road leading into Rome from the south for 120 miles, they crucified these men. That
works out to roughly one crucifixion for every 100 feet. And this was to be a warning
to anyone else who dares do what Spartacus and his men tried to
do. Josephus called it the worst
of all deaths. It was so horrible that you didn't
speak of it in polite company. You tried to, as it were, put
it out of your mouth because this death didn't just kill you. It just absolutely humiliated
you. It was an in-your-face type of
death. Death with an attitude. because
this death was designed to display to everybody that no matter what
you thought you might be, you are nothing. You are absolutely
a nobody. And to the Jew it was even worse,
because remember that text over in Deuteronomy 21, that he that
is hung on a tree is accursed of God. So the Jew who was crucified
would fall under that curse. And so he's not only a nobody
and a nothing in the sight of man, he's a nobody in the sight
of God. That's what they're displaying. You were typically beaten, scourged. Some died just from the scourging. You would be stripped naked.
I know we have depictions with a loincloth for modesty, but
that was not the reality. Stripped absolutely naked and
impaled on a cross. Most lingered sometimes for days. before they expired. The Romans
sometimes played around with crucifying men in various positions. They got bored of executing criminals,
so they played around with it. Basically, the man just eventually
could not lift himself anymore, could not open his lungs to get
air. Now, sometimes they would put
a peg between a man's leg, and you say, well, that was a merciful
accommodation. Oh, no. That just prolonged the
agony. By the time they died, the victim
usually was begging. begging for death. There are
accounts of birds eating the eyes out of a crucified man before
he's even dead, carrying already, feeding upon the body. Now what
is strange is that for all the thousands of people who have
been crucified in the ancient world, nobody had ever found
the bones or the remains of a crucified man. And of course, the liberal
scholars always say, well, you see, they really didn't nail
them to a cross. This is all made up, all fiction.
Until, that is, 1967, there was a road crew building a road in
Israel, and they happened to break into a sepulcher. burial
chamber. And there in an ossuary, a bone
box, was the bones of a very apparently crucified man. You
say, well, how do you know just the bones? Well, the heel bone
still had a nail, a spike, sticking through it. And we begin to understand
why normally you wouldn't find the bones of a crucified man.
Most of the time, they just threw them in the ditch. They didn't
bury them. And they would pull the nails out and reuse them.
But in this case, the nail had apparently hit a knot. There
was a little piece of olive wood still sticking to the end of
the nail. It had curved around the knot,
and so they couldn't pull it out. So they just cut the whole
man's foot off. But it was clearly an evidence
of crucifixion. The rest of his legs, by the
way, had been smashed to splinters. You remember what they did to
speed up the thieves' death? They broke their legs. They would
take a maul and just smash the leg to smithereens. I think,
by the way, last year they found another evidence of a crucified
man in Britain. You can look that up on the internet.
I haven't really studied it as much as the other one that was
in 1967-68. But anyway, very interesting
that yes, again, archaeology confirms the biblical story as
it always does. And notice that it is not enough
that they can do all this to you, nail you to the cross, and
leave you up there as a spectacle. They would do it in a very public
place. We do know not exactly where this took place, but it
was on a way into Jerusalem. Remember Simon Sarin was coming
in from the country. and they compel him to carry
Christ's cross when he could carry it no more. So it's as
public a spectacle as they could make it. It's to be a warning
to everybody. So you've been stripped naked,
beaten to a pulp, nailed to a post, and everybody's out there gawking
at you and mocking you. As your pastor read just before
our text this evening, They are basically saying these rulers
who clamored for his death, well, he saved others, but he can't
save himself. Isn't it interesting, again,
the irony that they're speaking better than they know? That's
true. If he saves others, he can't
save himself, right? And then the others are saying, I put the first one, Verse 37,
if thou be the king of the Jews, save yourself. Same thing. So
there is all this mockery going on. They have a titillum, it's
called, hanging over his head. That is the plaque that would
tell everybody what his crime is. And in this case, remember
it is he's the king of the Jews. It seems maybe as you compare
the accounts that the whole title was, this is Jesus of Nazareth,
the king of the Jews. And of course, you recall that
the Jews, the rulers, were so enraged at Pilate for putting
that up there. Notice again, the irony. That's exactly who he is. And
the Jews say to Pilate, hey, change that. And Pilate has been
pushed around as far as he's going to go. He's had it with
these guys. No, what I've written, I've written,
he says. And so the title over the head
of Christ, his crime, is that he is Jesus of Nazareth, the
King of the Jews. Now, what is fascinating is over
in Matthew chapter 27 in verse 44, where this same scene is
being described and the mocking of the rulers and everybody,
the crowd out there, it also adds that the thieves, plural,
cast the same into his teeth. That both thieves had earlier
been repeating the same mockery. Notice we have the one malefactor
in verse 39, you hear it from his mouth, if thou be the Christ,
save thyself and us. It is strange that even in their
dying breath, men will curse and mock the name of Jesus. But at some point, something
happened. Something changed for this one
thing. And I'll tell you what it was,
it was grace happened. Because grace, you see, is not
just unmerited favor. Grace, in some cases, is unmerited
ability. The ability to perceive, the
ability to see and to understand. And I want you to realize what's
going on here, that the eyes of the soul of this man are being
opened. We call that regeneration, don't
we? The work of the Holy Spirit that
smartens us up. You remember, we saw it in that
prodigal son the other evening. Remember his turning point? He
came to himself. You know, we use that language.
He came to. Where'd he been? He'd been in La La Land. That's
where he'd been. Out of his head. You know, again,
we think that we see clearly as a lost man and it's the lost
man who's drunk on the spirit of this age intoxicated by the
spirit of Satan. on his own pride and his own
importance, and all of a sudden what happened in that young man,
he sobers up. And once he sobers up, it's all
so clear. Jonathan Edwards pointed out
a text that I think is important. You know, during the great, the
Reformation, the main text that was preached to great effect
was the just shall live by faith. Right? That was the big issue
with Roman Catholicism. But in the great awakening, you'll
find that the theme is that you must be born again. Because they had so many people
in their churches who were there, they had sat under the sound
of sound preaching, but had never had a work of grace in their
heart. And Edwards pointed to this text, it's back in Deuteronomy
chapter 29, turn back there, it's worth the trip. Deuteronomy
29, it's one of these sermons of Moses that we find here at
the very end of the book of Deuteronomy. Deuteronomy 29, let's start in verse 2 and just read
a couple of verses here. Deuteronomy 29 verse 2, listen
to this very carefully. And Moses called unto all Israel
and said unto them, ye have seen all that the Lord did before
your eyes in the land of Egypt, unto Pharaoh and to all his servants
and to all his lands. The great temptations, the trials
that is, which thine eyes have seen, the signs and the great
miracles. I mean, think about it. There's
probably never lived a generation on earth that saw more miraculous
things than this generation that God brought out of Egypt. But
look at the next verse, verse four. Yet the Lord hath not given
you a heart to perceive and eyes to see and ears to hear unto
this day. You've seen, he says, but God
has not given you eyes to really see. to really hear. A heart that truly perceives. Do you see what's being said
here? And this sort of shaped Edwards' understanding of what
happens in conversion that God, notice who's going to give the
heart? God's got to give you a heart. This is regeneration. This is what salvation is. And
this is exactly what we see going on with this thief. All of a
sudden he's given a heart to perceive. He gets it. You know,
that's the language we use. Do you get it? Can you see it? And we're not
saying, do you literally see it? Notice God said to Israel,
you saw all the miracles, but you haven't really ever seen
it. And so what salvation involves
is this work of God in the heart opening the sinner's eyes that
he truly is able to perceive. We talk about in scripture the
hearing of faith. Paul uses that expression a couple
of times over in Galatians. The hearing of faith. that God,
first of all, there must be a message to hear. We're told that in Romans
10, how they're going to believe if they can't have it heard,
right? But when we preach the gospel, does everybody hear it?
Well, everybody in this room is hearing, but there is another
kind of hearing, a deeper hearing, a hearing of faith. whereby we
truly hear, and notice how hearing fits faith. Faith, you understand,
faith doesn't do a doggone thing to further your salvation in
itself. Faith itself is not the saving
thing. It's the object of faith that
is the saving thing. And what we're looking at here
when we talk about a faith that sees what saves the soul is a
faith that truly sees the object of salvation, the person and
work of Jesus Christ. That's who saves. Christ is the
savior, not your faith. I'm afraid our Armenian friends
get that mixed up sometimes. They're looking at the act of
believing as if it were some meritorious thing in itself.
I've said before, does hearing a symphony make the music prettier? You understand the ear is the
receptive organ of the soul. And so it is with the ear of
faith. It's how we receive Christ. We sometimes see it described
in the New Testament, especially in all those miracles of Christ
healing the blind. That is a seeing. You remember
he opened the eyes of that man born blind. In one sense, he
got physical sight, and then through the rest of the chapter,
he's given spiritual sight. Isn't it amazing how smart that
guy got? You know, I'm sure he'd never
been to school, never educated, and suddenly he's holding his
own toe to toe with the Pharisees. You know, I don't know much,
but one thing I know, once I was blind, now I see. You want me
to say this man's a sinner? Give me a break. And by the end
of the chapter, Jesus, do you believe on the sign of God? Who
is he that I might believe in? He that speaks to you, I believe. You see that there was a physical
opening of the eyes and now there is a deeper seeing in the soul. And once again, you may look
at a masterpiece, a wonderful painting. Does your looking at
it improve the painting? Of course not. It's the way you receive the
beauty of the painting. And so you understand why this
is under sort of explained this way, that that's how faith works. It's the means by which we receive
the Savior. And so we're talking about seeing
something, and I'm not talking about seeing spots or seeing
visions or things in the sky. I'm talking about this inward
seeing. If you wanna see a good example
of it, just take a look at this fella that we're looking at tonight.
I wanna show you first what he saw. And he saw his own sin. He rebukes the other thief in
verse 40 saying, does not thou fear God seeing thou art in the
same condemnation and we indeed justly. He sees his guilt. You say, well, that should be
rather obvious. He's being crucified by the Romans. Surely he's, have
you ever had a prison ministry y'all? I've been in prison places
over my years and preaching to different... It's hard to find
a guilty guy in prison. I mean, honestly. I mean, everybody
in there, they've been framed. They've been ratted out by their
rat partner. There's a sting. I was a setup. Nobody's guilty. We ought to
turn them loose because you owe us them. None of them deserve
to be there. And that's what's so peculiar
about this man. All of a sudden he's confessing,
yes, I'm getting exactly what I got coming to me. This is not
an injustice. I'm getting it. That's an amazing
thing. A sinner who sees his sin and
confesses his sin. And then secondly, notice the
second thing he sees is the innocence of Jesus. Notice he goes on,
but this man hath done nothing. You might ask yourself, don't
you have to have some proclamation of the gospel in order to believe
it? Romans 10 seems to say that. But where did this guy get a
proclamation of the gospel? I think it's going on all around
him. In the mockery. You saved others, but you can't
save yourself. King of Israel, come down. He's got a plaque
over his head telling you who he is. that he may have had no encounter
with Christ at all till this moment, but in the events that
are happening, I must go switch words,
happening all around him, he is getting a glimpse of who Jesus
is, who he claims to be. They are preaching the gospel
to him in their mockery of the Savior. Do you see the irony?
They have become the preacher in displaying, announcing who
Jesus is. And then another thing, remember
that after they are crucified, Jesus has remained silent throughout
this whole episode. And now he's gonna say something. You see his lips begin to move.
You open your ears, you hear what comes out. Is he gonna curse his attackers? Is he gonna say,
just wait till I get to the throne and I'll get you guys? What comes
out of his mouth? Father, forgive them for they
know not what they do. I can well imagine this thief
has never heard such a response as that in a situation like this. If there was anything to convince
him of Christ's innocence, it would be those words. This man
is not an evil man. He's not a malefactor. This man
has done nothing amiss. And it just keeps getting more
and more amazing. Not only does he see his own
sin, he sees the innocence of Christ, but he sees Christ as
a king with a kingdom. Let that sink in. He turns to this man on a cross
next to him who has by this time been beaten to a bloody pulp and says, Lord, Remember me when you come into
your kingdom. He sees a king headed into a
kingdom. Now pray tell, who else saw Jesus
as a king with a kingdom at this moment? I mean, go ask the disciples
if you can find them. about this kingdom. What would
they tell you? What would Peter say? What would
John say? They say, don't you understand? There's not gonna
be a kingdom. The king is over there being crucified. We're
gonna be lucky if we can get out of town alive, and we're
gonna head back north up to Galilee with our tails between our legs,
begging for our old jobs back that we walked away from. It's
over, don't you get it? That's their attitude. You want
to see a man whose eyes have been opened to see and to perceive. Here you see it. Lord, remember
me when you come into your kingdom. And then he sees the way, the
way of grace, the way of mercy. I mean, natural man's religion,
as we have stated all week long, is this quid pro quo thing. I
give you something to get something. It's a bargain. Let's make a
deal. That's how a lost man thinks. And you say, well, Jesus, if
you'll save me and bring me into your kingdom, I'll serve you
all the days of my life. Big deal. Your life is just a
few hours from being over. You know, I'll work, I'll labor.
It's hard to do good works when your hands are nailed to a cross,
right? That option is not open for this
man. And so what does he do? He throws
himself on the mercy of this king. Just remember me. It's like that Syrophoenician
woman up there near Lebanon, who when Jesus said, I didn't
come except for the lost sheep of the house of Israel, she was
a Gentile. It's not right to take the children's bread and
throw it to dogs, the affectionate way Jews referred to the Gentiles.
And she says, yeah, Lord, but even the dogs eat of the crumbs
that fall from the master's table. Very similar situation. Just
remember me. Think on me. But then we might ask this question. Okay, if Jesus is a king with
a kingdom, Why in the world would He want someone like you in it? The Romans don't want you in
their kingdom. They're crucifying you to get
you out of their kingdom. If He is this righteous, just
King, the King of Israel, why would He want someone like you? And oh, here we see that this
Savior, as Paul put it, this saying that is worthy of all
acceptation, he says, everybody ought to receive this and accept
it. Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners. We've
seen that all along, haven't we? All through our study this
week, he came not for the righteous, but for sinners. He doesn't say
to this man, well, okay, well, we'll see about that. Let me
think about it. Or I tell you what, I think I'll
let you sizzle in purgatory for a little while and see if we
can clean you up. Rather, it's today. Today, you will be with me in
paradise. Now, paradise, I mean, we can
spend the rest of the day talking about where it is and what it
is and all that. Well, it's the good place. Let's just put it
there. Sometimes called Abraham's bosom. It's where the righteous
dead go, okay? It's where Jesus was going, to
paradise. And the amazing thing is he says
to this man, you're gonna be there with me. You're coming
with me. And then what he told his disciples
there in John 14, I'm going away. prepare a place for you. My father's
house are many mansions, many chambers. I go to prepare one
for you. And if I go away, I come again
to receive you unto myself that where I am there, ye may be also. I want you with me. We have this idea that, you know,
just a mansion on the hilltop. Well, I don't want a mansion
on the hilltop. I want a little cabin in the back 40 and not
too close to Jesus. You know, that would be a little
uncomfortable. My friend, this is not describing
you and your little cabin out there detached. It's talking
about you living with Christ in his father's house. I'm going
to prepare a chamber, a place for you in my father's house. Why in the world would he want
to be with me? That's the amazing thing about
this grace, that he saves us to be with us, to tabernacle
with us and among us. That's the whole point of salvation.
We see that promise all the way. The aim, the goal is that God
is going to walk among his people, live in them, among them and
tabernacle with them. It's an astounding thought that
he saved me to be with him forever and ever. Not for just three
days till we, like most companies, start to stink, but forever and
ever in his father's house. If ever there was a text that
proves to us salvation by grace, this is it. It's, by the way,
that's why those who believe in salvation by works hate it
so much. I've got a Church of Christ guy
in my neighborhood, and every now and then I run into him,
and oh my, he hates for me to bring this text up. Of course,
he's got his ways of trying to worm around it, but all of a
sudden, if you think you've gotta be baptized, you think you've
gotta do some good works, you've gotta do all this stuff, this
text, Nails you. Here's a guy who's done nothing
all his life to earn any favor with God. And in his dying breath,
he is turning to the Lord and the Lord has received him wholly
on the basis of his grace and mercy. He doesn't deserve it,
but neither do you, neither do I. A real test of whether we
truly believe in salvation by grace is whether we believe in
what we call deathbed conversions. Now, I want to be very sober
here. I remind you of that comment
Matthew Henry makes in his commentary on this text. He talks about
the two thieves and he says, one was saved that none might
despair, but only one that none might presume. Let that sink
in. You see what he's saying? I know
what some of you out there saying, I'll just then just live a life
of sin and on my deathbed I'll turn to Christ and go to heaven.
Well, my friend, it doesn't work like that. My experience, Brother
Greg, I think you would back me up here. Most men die like
they live. And the very notion that somehow
salvation is at your disposal, that you can snap your fingers
and it happens whenever you want, is denying the whole reality
of what's going on here. Here is sovereign grace coming
at God's appointed time. And so don't ever presume that
somehow it's today. Today is today. You know, Paul
uses that language. Right now is the day of grace.
There's a door open. Head for it. But on the other
hand, don't despair. As long as one has breath, there's
hope. And honestly, I don't presume
to know what goes on on the deathbed. There could well be that God
is doing a work in the heart of the man lying there that I'm
completely ignorant of. So I never want to get so jaded.
to believe that this is impossible because what I'm betraying then
is that you've got to have a little bit of good in you to go to heaven. You know, you can be a sinner,
but you can't be this big a sinner. And what this is teaching us
now, here's a man who was a sinner right up to his dying breath
that Christ saves and takes to glory. Praise Him. Praise God. This riles the self-righteous
man But my friend, this is music to the sinner's ears. That majestic
sweetness sits enthroned upon the Savior's brow. His head with
radiant glory shine, his lips with grace or flow. He is a gracious Savior who loves
to bestow grace on the unworthy, on the undeserving sinner. That's
why he came. Well, let me wrap this up by
pointing you to an Old Testament incident in Numbers 21 where
we see Israel camping in the midst of poisonous snakes. And
I've had a little experience with poisonous snakes lately
up in our cabin. I think I'm on number 13 as far
as rattlesnakes I've killed now. My oldest daughter emailed me
and said, aren't they endangered? And I said, well, yeah, they
are if I see them. They sure are. If I see them, they're dead,
you know. And I don't like them, let me
tell you. I don't like to have to deal
with them. Killed four of them last summer, two of them down
in the cellar of her cabin. I don't like going to bed at
night thinking about rattlesnakes down below. I don't like snakes,
and that's what we find here. Israel camping amidst a bunch
of poisonous snakes, and they're getting bitten, and apparently
they didn't have any animal around. People are dying, keeling over
left and right, and they come to Moses. Moses, you got to do
something. Moses cries to the Lord, and the Lord says, I tell
you what, make a brass serpent and put it on a pole in the midst
of the camp, and when anyone is bitten, have him go look at
the serpent on the pole, and he'll be healed. And lo and behold,
they make this brass snake, put it on the pole, and when people
are bitten, they look and they live. Now, if we're just reading
through the Bible and hit that, we say, well, you know, that's
an interesting story. You sort of scratch our head.
I wonder what's going on here till we get to John chapter three.
Now you know John 3, 16, right? Most everybody knows that verse.
But back up two verses. Jesus prefaces John 3, 16 with
John 3, 14 and 15. Where Jesus says, as Moses lifted
up the serpent in the wilderness, now you know what he's talking
about. As Moses lifted up that brass snake in the wilderness,
even so, just like that, the son of man must be lifted up,
that whosoever believes on him, shall have eternal life. Notice
how seeing in the type is now replaced with believing. Because
you see, believing is just another kind of seeing. It's the seeing
of the soul, the seeing of the heart, the seeing of the understanding.
Do you see what Christ is saying? Just like that snake was put
on a pole, I'm gonna have to be lifted up. That verb there,
hupsoho, it's an interesting verb. It's used three times in
the Gospel of John, and every time it's referencing the cross. I'm gonna be lifted up. Sounds
like a good thing. I'm saying, you know, do you
wanna be lifted up or put down? He said, I'd rather be lifted
up, but this clearly has a double meaning to it. Because the people,
when they hear Jesus say, the Son of Man, the Messiah, is going
to have to be lifted up, they say, wait a minute, we thought
the Messiah was going to live forever. And John puts a little footnote
later on in his gospel to make sure you and I, the slow ones
in the glass, that we catch up on what's going on. This he was
speaking of the manner of his death, the way he's going to
die. And he's going to die a curse.
The serpent. Cursed is everyone that hangs
on a cross or on a tree. That wasn't what the law said.
And Paul quotes that in Galatians and said, you know what that
means? Christ was made a curse for us so that the blessing of
Abraham could fall and flow unto us. He took the curse so that
we might receive the blessing. And how did they get it? They
looked. You remember Spurgeon's conversion?
You remember his story, his teenage boy out going to church one morning,
snowstorm, decided to duck into a primitive Methodist church.
And he got there, and the fellow that was scheduled to preach
didn't make it because of the snowstorm, and there was just
one of the old men got up there, and as Spurgeon said, could hardly
string two or three words together. and took that text out of Isaiah,
look unto me all the ends of the earth and be you saved. And
that just rather unlearned common old man began to preach that
text and said, here it says, look, you don't have to be educated
to look. All you gotta do is look. Anybody
can look. He got towards the end and Spurgeon
said, he shouted as only a primitive Methodist could shout and then
turned and looked right at Spurgeon and said, young man, you look
miserable and miserable you are and miserable you will remain
till you look to Jesus Christ. And Spurgeon said, it was just
like the light turned on. I got it. He said, I looked so
hard that I thought I was gonna look my eyes out, look to Jesus. And that was his conversion. You see how simple, look and
be he saved. John Newton, the old slave ship
captain that was converted. We know him from his ministry
in England, but also from his poems and hymns. May I close
with quoting you one. I saw one hanging on a tree in
agony and blood. He fixed his languid eyes on
me as near his cross I stood. Sure never till my latest breath
can I forget that look. He seemed to charge me with his
death, though not a word he spoke. My conscience felt and owned
the guilt. It plunged me in despair. I saw
my sin, his blood had shed, and helped to nail him there. Alas,
I knew not what I did, but all my tears were vain. For could
this guilty soul be hid? For I, the Lord, have slain. A second look he gave, which
said, I freely all forgive. This blood is for thy ransom
paid. I die that thou might live. Thus while his death, my sin
displays in all its blackest hue, such is the mystery of grace. It seals my pardon too. With pleasing grief and mournful
joy, my conscience now is filled, that I should such a life destroy,
yet live by him I killed. Amazing grace, how sweet the
sound that saved a wretch like me. I once was lost, but now
I'm found. was blind, but now I see." Oh, if you're outside of Christ
tonight, look, look unto Jesus. You say, well, how do I? Look
away from yourself. Get your eyes off of you. Get
your eyes turned from within, without. Where do I find him? Where do I see him? He reigns
in heaven at the right hand of God. There's where you must go. There's where you must flee.
How am I gonna get there? Only one way I know is prayer,
crying out. Be merciful to a sinner like
me. Cast yourself. from the mercy
of God. You see, it doesn't matter how
well you look, how long you look, how hard you look, it's to whom
you look. Let's pray. Father, thank you
for Jesus, for him coming to save sinners, transforming them
from rebels into servants, from those who defy you into those
who love you, doing that miracle of grace in the heart of man.
Do it again, Father. We're so dependent on it. We
think if we can just preach better and better illustrations, use
better words, that somehow that's going to do the trick. And Father,
we forget what we find back there in Deuteronomy. The Lord, you've
got to give them a heart, a heart to see and hear and to perceive. Lord, do it. Do it for Jesus'
sake. May you save his people. And
may you do it, that we might see it and glorify your name.
Do it again, Father, in Jesus' name I pray, amen.
The Thief on the Cross - 5
Series Glimpses of Grace from Luke
This is the last of five messages from Pastor Mark Webb in the series Glimpses of Grace from the Gospel of Luke.
| Sermon ID | 46231227294796 |
| Duration | 45:11 |
| Date | |
| Category | Special Meeting |
| Bible Text | Luke 23:39-43 |
| Language | English |
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